The Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon) 1922-current, July 06, 1944, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    ■h 1 . 1
CotUßf (Grovr Entrari
Established August 15, 1889
Published Every Thursday at
Cottage Grow, Oregon
l>
CH A PTI K II
veloped with awful rapidity.
He
saw him self dying, painfully, gasp­
M rs. W inkle, upon learning thnl ing for water He saw his body In a
W. C. MARTIN ............................ ..
--------------- '.----- Editor, Publisher
her husband planned to open a gen­ trench with many others, and the
Subscription Rates, Cash in Advance
eral re p a ir shop p ractically In ihelr earth of some strange, foreign land
In Lane-Douglas Counties...... ................................... ................ 1 year $2.00
living room, decried It bitterly She being thrown upon II.
His mind
felt that being the wife o' what she dwelt on the unenviable picture
In Lane-Douglas Counties — ..... .........„ .... .............. _ ........ 6 months $1.23
term ed a handy man lowered her
In Lane-Douglas Counties ....................................................... 3 months $.75
Even w|ien lie managed to shut
social standing
She declared »lie it out, he didn't gel right to work.
Outside This District ................................................................... 1 year $2.25
would have nothing whatsoever to After he hud changed, lie sat In the
Outside This District ....................... ...................................... 6 months $1.50
ini with the vnt« pi-iso and would worn but com fortable old chair near
Outside This District ................................................................ 3 months $.90
te th e r starve than to so murh as the stove flocking slowly and blink­
Exceptions to men and women in armed forces:
glance nt It. She took this decided ing through his spectacles, he re­
In U. S. A:
1 year $2.00;
6 months $1.50;
3 months $1 00.
stand despite the fact that she hud viewed the events leading up t«> the
Overseas:
1 year $150;
6 months $1.00.
a m o d e l income from a m u u II estate ■ tragedy,
left bv her parents and that on this
W .N U RC tC A SC
M r. W inkle and the other men of
Foreign rates on application No subscription accepted for less than 3
account sh«i and M r. wfmkle could his age hud assured each other that
months. Important: In changing address notify us immediately and
' have managed, though their stand
give former as well as present address.
they would never be used as sol­
urd of living would have been sharp
Entered at Cottage Grove, Oregon, as second class matter.
diers. They were of that loft gen-
I
c a u T rs i
ty curtailed.
that deep down, in spite of het sharp
cration between rounds of the world
lle r voice came again, catling li
At that tim e M r W inkle still wore war. too young for Ihe first session,
words and orders, she loved him and
to
him
.
"
It's
the
newspaper
th«-y
It never in the world ever oc­ he loved her. Beyond his specula­
one leg uf the trousers in his house, and too old for the second.
want to coma out and interview
curred to M r W inkle that he would tion on how she would receive the
so
he proceeded on the basis Uiut It
Even after the d raft registration
you."
be drafted and sent off to the wavs. news, he had a reluctance about
was more rrspectuble for him to for them, they hud said Ihe some
V.'ar was for young men. not for a telling her.
A larm ed at this, and at Amy ask provide, and mure reasonable to
things. "W e couldn't stand the life ,’*
settled m arried m an ci forty-four.
mg Ins advice about something In­ eut well, than to have a social stand­
they proposed. "M arching ull night
Yet he didn't see what else he
stead
of
deciding
it
herself,
M
r
.Juvenile delinquency, much discussed in these d a .s , is
There was talk of the A rm y not could do. With a sigh, he went into
ing
He took hie wife at her word und cruwling on your stuniarh In a
Winkle asked. "M e’ Now' Here.*' and built h.’s shop across the rear
e v id e n tly a c ity and not a fa rm problem , according to W heeler wanting the older men. but nothing the house,
ditch Is for the young fellows."
Mrs. W inkle g iv e an affirm ative of their property without an en- 1
M c M ille n , e d ito r-in -c h ie f. F arm J o u rn a l. " A t least 1 have n ’t had .vet been done about this The
Mrs. W inkle was already behind
Yet M r Winkle had wondered. If
h i-.itd much about fa rm youngsters g e ttin g in to more tro u b le thing being done was what M r. W in­ tier half of ihe newspaper in the answer to each of these questions trance or even a window on the there wasn't some plun (or using
1 her words sound ng like strangled house side
kle received in this morning's mail.
Mrs.
W
inkle
had
never
than u su a l,” lie says. " C o u ld it be that th e y are too b u s y ! When he reached in the mailbox and breakfast nook, which was all the chirps:
them, why were they registered?
visited hurt, even when she found it
C ould tlier«* be some re la tio n between the urban v a ritie s o f took out the communication from his (lining room their small house pos­
There followed a period ol listen­
M r. W inkle thought, desperately more com fortable not to starve And
ing to every scrap of further Infor­
ju v e n ile «lelitiqueney and too much freedom fro m w o rk ."’
draft board, his hands trem bled a sessed. M r. Winkle, in his mind,
from
then
on
she
drv«-loped
Into
Suddenly,
he
wanted
Io
lash
out
at
’little.
Peering through his metal- could look right through the paper something "C ertain ly not." he suid what he preferred to think of her mation to lie found in the pu|>ers,
and see her. a well-tilled out lady of
over Ihe radio and in the magazines
rim
m
ed
glasses, lie read that he
A fam ily in W isconsin h a b itu a lly paid .Ml cents to au In d ia n
" I can't wail around here
I'v e gut instead of by any other word; a
exactly his awn age. To a person
Most of this wus conflicting, with
was classified I-A .
termagant.
to
get
to
the
shop.
And
1
don't
lo r a pail 01 lilu c b e rrii s. lin t one «lay last sum m er be upped
seeing her for ihe first tim e, she
no
one uhle to make up his mind.
He
knew
what
that
meant.
After
E ach m orn in g M r . W in k le
tell them 1 don't want to be Inter
the price to $l.tX). " W h y ! ” th .v asked. " H e l l o f
appearand dainty In spits of her
marched out the front door quite Flnatiy u few bold facts became
viewed.'*
plain, at least In rrlution to M r.
M rs W inkle passed on his views •is tf he were going downtown to Winkle's druft Loard In the (own of
business
He
walked
up
the
block.
They didn't
The following was sent to Mrs
fa
. .
a
UP°" second glance, to over the telephone
It begun to call older
..round the corner, and then to the Springville
men
Right now it had reached
V irol R andall by h er husband'
, /
lher* on ,h* fr” ’t »‘*1»
“ * » “-* h*' "P*
s.ed seem to make inueh impression, for
Mrs. Winkle, after listening to what
Vinat T Randall S e a C lx J C s ' J M
2
««
j
1
h‘S huuse' • snial* n' a« engulfed themselves together and the per-
those m arried without children, but
who is w ith X
it i n n
, ? R a ,Ph 2 ,and
d a rte r
by a tremendous event thai toppled petual frown that creased the other-
was said in reply, kept ugreeing
with wives who had Independent In­
J
the Stabw ‘!* stationed C a ro le re tu rn e d to th e ir hom e in over his world and sent it bowling wise smooth pink skin between her doubtfully. "Yes . . . yes. but oh
comes of Ihelr own.
in New Guinea:
Poulsho. Wash.. Thursday after oil into space like a cannon ball, blue eyes.
I can see that's probably rig h t."
M r. Winkle met the flrst require­
Am y pulc, n<> attentlun #s M r
T H E S E A B E E S P E A K S A G A IN -‘'Pending two weeks at the home He thought:
She hung up and came back
Sh«
ment. Mrs Winkle lived op to the
So you're tired of working, niis’er.
Mrs. Hand's mother. Mi's. M.
Not he. who had been m arried for Winkle carefully stepped over l*e-
appeared to be slightly dazed
second regulation.
lle r small In­
and you think you’ll rest a bit Mosby. Mr. Hand came Tuesday twenty years. Not he. a form er nelope, the third m em ber of the
com e. together w ith the fills dollars
"They said." she tuld M r Winkle
You've been working pretty steady and returned with them, being careful accountant who was now the fam ily.
a month allotment paid to the w lvts
"th at you're already something of a
and you’re getting sick of it. called by the death of his father. conservative proprietor of a modest
T heir sad eyed spaniel was set-
of soldiers, would be rnougli for her
celebrity from being the flrst m ar
general repair shop located in the tied on the tloor with her black mug-
You think the war is ending so Fred Hand in Oakland.
to support herself.
ried m an in the older men's clessifl
you're slowing down the pace.
The Henry Cooper family is alley back of his house. Not he. zle resting, on her paws. At eight, cation to be drafted and that it's
Sitting there In his shop. M r Win­
That's what you think, mister, but spending this week on a trip to with his overly active and morbid Penelope in her dog world was ap- your patriotic duty to set a good
kle thought of his fighting back­
im agination. Not he. wno was n«j proxinw tely M r. Winkle's cumpara-
you bet it ain't the case.
Eastern Oregon,
ground, It had riot been much Up
exam ple. T hey're com.ng out her«
What would you think, sir, if we
Fourth of July guests at the man of action, but was a fra id lu live age in the human world. She to take pictures of -of us both. ••
until Ihe tim e he was ten. he was
known In his neighb<irh<Hid for hav­
quit now because we're tired Louis Dodge home were Mrs. Ada death of guns or violence of ar.y sort, was as am iable and m ild as M r.
" I won't do it,
he said.
And
Nut he, with ins stored-up m em - W inkle him self. Never having been you shouldn't—"
ing won sevrrul fights
There was
. t0° 7
Jennings and Mrs. Mary Land of
a certain group of boys he could
W e’re flesh and blood and human. Harrisburg. Mr. and Mrs Fverett ° r>
^ow’ a# a boy With h‘s
»Uoued a husband, she had a rather
"But,
W
ilb
ert."
Mrs Winkle pro
_a __•
• .
’ ... . . .
•
(irrwinv
droopy Hicrwoi»!,««
disposition. W-....
Now, 1«.
in her _.a
m id­
bully and bluff, or lick, it It came
and we re just as tired as you. Wright and family of Reedsport
tested, " it won't look right If w r
dle
age.
she
had
given
up
hope
and
right down to It.
Did you ever dig a foxhole and and Mr. and .Mrs. Delbert Jen-
don't.
no longer pretended to any interest
Thro that prowess had come to a
elimb dow n deep inside.
nings and son Gary , also of Reeds-
" I don't care how it looks Where's
at the sight of a male, but simply
quick end.
His teeth, growing In
And wish it went to China, so port, who are spending a few days
my
h
a
t'
He
was
em
boldi
nod
to
sniffed loftily or Ignored the meet­
crookedly, w ere being straightened
you'd have some place to hide? here.
be perem ptory "W here s my lunch
ing altogether.
by that ignominious process of Slav­
While buzzards with motors i
n
________________
boa?”
ing wire hands put around them Io
Penelope,
M
r
Winkle
thought,
them circled over head.
H A Y A P P O IN T E D
He saw them both where they
draw them into place
Returning
was no more prepared for the large,
And filled the ground around you
were kept ready for his departure
home from school one day with
adventurous and dangerous things
with hot exploding lead.
F w m :m Day. Eugene attorney
to business
He snatched them u|
two other boys, a discussion rose
of life, such as w ar, than he.
And did you ever dig out, mister, has been appointed deputy dis-
almost savagely, and clamped the
among them as to whether or not
He sat heavily In his place in the
front debris, rocks and (lilt.
trict attorney by William Fort
hat on his head. He hadn't felt *0
he could lick one of them.
breakfast nook. From behind her
And feel yourself all over, to see acting district attorney and has
aroused for many years. He didn't
During the experiment of proving
paper.
M
rs.
Winkle
demanded,
where you were hurt.
taken up his duties in the office
quite know what to m.ike of the wav
he could not, the inside of his mouth
"Anything for m e?"
And find you couldn't move, of the district attorney, it was
was cut to ribbons by the copper
"N o o," answered M r Winkle.
though you weren't hurt at all. announced at Eugene Saturday
bands—-the main contributing cause
At his draw ing out of the word,
And fell so darned relieved you'd Fort has held the district attor-
He saw h im s e lf d yin g, p a in fu lly , of his liuiniliating and painful de­
Mrs. Winkle put her paper aside and
gasping fu r w ater.
just sit there and bawl?
ney's office since March 1st when
feat.
looked at her husband. She didn't
Were you ever hungry, mister not Willaim Bartle was given a leave
From then on M r Winkle, boy
alley.
Along lids he went to his
see what he had received, for he
the kind that food soon gluts, of absence to enter military ser-
and man, ceased to be a w arrior,
shop,
where
he
worked
until
dinner
held
it
below
the
table
But
Irom
But
That was the extent of M r W in­
'» a gnawing, cutting, hunger, vice. Day was appointed hy the
tim e, and then retraced his steps.
the look of M r. Winkle and the lone
that bites into your guts?
kle's fighting history Now. belated­
county court Saturday.
Tbe alley in which he had his
of his voice, she knew at once.
ly. at forty four the moment made
It's a homesick hunger, mister,
<hop was not n depressing thorough­ him think of his age as being only
M rs W inkle was the flrst to speak
and it digs around inside,
LANE SHIPS 42 TONS
fare.
but
quite
an
attractive
one.
again. H er frown deepened and her
six years until he was fifty—it
And it’s got you in its clutches,
TIN CANS
It was a d irt lane lined with trees
lips were light when she stated dis- 1
seemed as if it were to have a future.
and there ain’t no place to hide
-_______ .
nnd a number of private garages
approvingly. "W ilb ert, your notice
Why. he thought, this Is impossi­
U ere you ever dirty, mister, not
During the first six months of
M
r.
W
inkle's
shop
was
tio
eyesore,
has come.”
ble. It's really Incredible.
the w ilty collar kind.
1944, Oregon civilians shipped 42
but a substantial fram e building
Silently. M r. W inkle handed over
M r Winkle w asn't in the least
But oozy, slimy, mess dirt, or the carloads, representing 711 tons, of
(Minted a cheery blue, with wide
the notice to her.
sure about how he would fight
It
gritty kind that grinds?
prepared tin cans to the detinning
double
door-
io
perm
it
the
entrance
Mrs. W inkle took it In at a single
would be different If he were young-
Did you ever mind the heat sir, plant at South San Francisco. ¿ 5 5 =5^ '
of uiitornobilrs needing h it attention,
glance H er face went white
H er
er. or happentd 10 be a great big
not just the kind that makes California, the state salvage com- W x
and tall windows
Above the doors strapping sort of fellow.
frown disappeared and her mouth
was
a
sign
announcing:
sweat run,
m ittee disclosed this week.
softened. She looked bewildered, as
Well, lie wasn't. Ha was small,
Peering through bis m etal rim m ed
But the kind that dnves you
Of this total Lane county is
if props had been knocked out troni
almost frail, and Ineffectual physi­
T II E F IX I T k l i o r
glasses be read be was classified 1A.
crazy, till you even curse the credited with the shipment of 46
under her and she had no solid
cally. Some men were Ucgis and
We Repair Anything
, . , sun '
tons, or an average contribution rifle, he had shot a squirrel. The ground to stand on. She said breath­
some were mice
He was a middle-
M
r.
W
inkle
had
w
orried
a
little
Were you every weary, mister. I to the war effort of 1.27 pounds tiny anim al fell from the high lessly, as if caught off guard.
aged mouse. And the mouse s s i —
about the wording of this. Making
mean dog tired you know.
p?r capita. The state per capita branch where he aim ed at it. land­ "Y o u 're going to w a r."
ut least he udm itled It. If only to
his promise in the plural w n t more
M r. Winkle cleared his throat so
v.nen your feet ain’t got no feel- average for the six-month period ing with a thud on the hard ground.
him self the mouse was afraid.
impressive, as if there existed a
mg, and your legs don’t want is 1.21 pounds.
He wanted to uphold his country.
When he held the v.arm , fuzzy body as to be sure he could control his
large si a if of workers.
The fact
to go?
He questioned not at all his coun­
in his hand, he was sick at heart own voice, trying it out this way
that there was no one except htm-
But we keep a goin', mister, you
try's calling upon him to do It. But
at what he had done. In later life, without first chancing how it might
seif was perhaps deceptive. But he
" I t m eans," he explained.
bet your life we do.
he fell doubtful, beyond his terror,
when he stepped on an ant. or sound
FISH PLANTED
fell ail right about It when he con­
of what kind of soldier he would
And let me tell you mister, we
$quash«?d a spider, or even swatted " I'm just being passed on to the
sidered that he und the shop Itself
A rm y doctors."
make.
expect the same of you.
a
fly,
M
r.
Winkle
felt
squeamish
ai
A total of 46,000 cut throat
could be counted as two.
••You're going to w a r,” Mrs. W in­
He hoped there was no question
trout were planted last week by taking life.
He lived up to the boast on his
kle repeated in a whisper. Now she
I t wash I u n til he had gone «orru- sign. He was adept at finding out about this m atter In the mind of any-
COTTAGE GROVE LAKE NOT the state game department in the
Upon being called by his draft
looked actually frightened, amazed, w a y th a t it o ccu rred to hi.-n he had
CONTAMINATED
Cottage Grove lake. The fish were board last week for physical ex am i­ and hurt.
what the trouble was with any m e­ on«- who detected in him signs of not
looking forward Io going to war.
forgo tten to kiss hi« w ife goodhy.
liberated between Cedar Creek nation, M r. W .nkle had thought that
chanical gadget and. what is more,
It had been years since M r. Win­
M r Winkle roused himself and be­
Reports that the Cottage Grove and the Major LaLonde home.
the strar.ge doctor appreciated his
People from all
..............
.. h * ?«!»• for there was fear mixed in at putting it right
kle had seen such expressions
on his
gan to work on a bicycle. The rep­
Jake was contaminated and unsafe
________________
dyspepsia, his nearsightedness, his
over
his
section
of
town,
and
many
wife's face They affected him deep- him> ,o°* »I” «« with his tmacciis
resentative from the newspaper a r ­
for swimmers was denied Monday WANTED: LOOKOUT FOR RU- caved-in chest, his good beginning
turned anger.
M ainly, there was from farth e r away, brought him rived in the middle of the morning.
for swimmers was denied here
jada lookout siation. If inter- on a paunch (even though otherwise ly. He began. "Now. A m y—’
their
difficulties
or
culled
him
In.
He
"Y o u 'll be k ille d !" Mrs. Winkle the sense of being unnerved by an
He was a tall, brash-looking young
he was skinny eaough to be under­
Monday by several local residents.
accepted with one exception—any
unsure Am y.
man with a wild mop of hair who
The water in the lake this year
ted COntact ,h e - U S - '•°rest w eight), his Jumped-up pulse at the wailed.
work tiiat came along.
At this excitem ent, and perhaps
He turned, end marched to the
introduced himself. " I'm Onward,
is better than last because t h e ScrVi“ * DLssto"' Oregon. Phone slightest exertion, and his general
The only thing with which he
at the r,ew, strange tone in Mrs,
front door.
M rs W inkle fallowed
Ihe reportographer."
make-up
of
no
great
muscularity.
would
have
nothing
to
do
was
fire­
first water has been drained off 10F2'
47-ltp.
W inkle's voice, Penelope began to him.
W ilb ert." she said weakly, arm s.
" Ih e what?” asked M r W inkle,
N ever before had M r. Winkle howl.
you have to. and you know it,"
and last year the water tested 96.
He didn’t like or trust guns In the staring at him with nssurunce that
SalesbooKs, receipt books, book- known him self to be such a physi­
M r. Winkle had counted on no
„,_u r u 1
. l
“ ,e ' ’ m *
reaehed the steps least. I t was also his conviction that he was not going to like M r. On-
'ell in the margin of safety.
cal wreck.
keepin-’ systems. The Sentinel.
such behavior on the part of h i, outside,
M r. Wo kie had sornewhm they caused much more {rouble in
wurd any more than he cured for
The doctor pursed his lips at the wife. He had become so accustomed
being Interviewed.
c
a
lm
e
d
H
is
sm
all
storm
was
near-
the
world
than
any
worth
they
had,
visual evidences of this close ap­ to her shrewish ways that he hadn't
M r. Onward set down the cam era
lie blinked. " I supptg«,’' und that when a man had a gun In
proach to the grave. He frowned pictured them being punctured so ly over,
he carried and explained with broud
he
a
d
m
itte
d
.
"
1
II
have
to
do
a
lot
his
hand
he
felt
beyond
him
self
und
in such a m anner as to give M r. .ab ru ptly.
If, a
proceeded on a false basis of power. patience, "Reportographer.
Winkle reason for counting on his
He realized what a blow it was to of things I don't feel like doii.g "
Abruptly, he strode aw ay, down ,f a customer hud a riflg; or a shot- contracUon of reporter and pholog-
not
being
recommended.
And
though
her
She
was
threatened
with
not
There are m any e.xprewiion.s o f i ll health common to
the walk, and tiis-n along the street Mun or a revolver nredlng repair, he rapher. Technically. | m ,,„ |v , he
a ll ol ns w it,m itt the acttoal presenep o f disease. The la n g u id , the doctor and the Aiembers of the iiaving him around to order about.
lust part.
But with ao many re-
It
wasn't until tie hud gone some l,fld ,o tu,<t• •• elsewhere
d raft board.-w orking their m ysteri­
To have him removed from her way tiiat it occurred to him lie had
the lazy, the in d iffe re n t, the moody, the easily tire d , the sharp ous ways, had nut comm itted them
T h l* morning, ns M r. Winkle porters gone off t<, w a r, I got to b«
tem pered, m erely thus express v a ry in g degrees o f ill health. selves on the result, it still hadn't and sent off to w ar destroyed her firgotten to kus Ins w it« goodby, *a lk e d 11 little over a block uloog both. I made up the name myself.
"Listen, he said us he opened h it
Circuitous route to get the fifty
Aeeustomed ;,s we are to consult a physician o n ly when a c tu a lly seemed real to M r. Winkle that he defenses and left her bewildered and It was the first tim e lie had neglect-
alone.
It revealed the basic a f­
on* divorced wife,
sick, we q u ite overlook thes expressions o f ill health w h ieli would be seriously considered as a fection she had for him. M r. Winkle cd this ritu al in thoir whole m ar , , , 't «w«y from where he started ' ! " " " , r,n.'
rled life. O rd in arily, he would have he Was a thftughtful man.
’ '* ,“ . . 0 1 * . • . ? ' ° ” e 'n i,rrle ,i wife,
soldier.
occur d a ily in o u r vs.irk-a-day w o rld and fre q u e n tly are fo re ­
three kids
I haven't taken a vaca­
,,e opened his shop methodically,
The notice couldn't mean him He reflected that it was taking the been called back and given Instruc
runners o f disease. They should he p ro p e rly analyzed as such looked at it again, to see if, possi­ greatest w ar in history to accom­ lions. But there was no sound from throwing wide the doors and letting tion the last two years liecause I
and rem edied; we should by in trospection a pply these sym ptom s bly. there had been some mistake. plish this.
Am y.
In the sun. Usually, every morning couldn t stand being home all day
Frort, the look on her face. M r
G u iltily, he glanced once behind, he looked nt h is place of work with I tried Io enlist to get «way f , u,n
to ottrsi'lves tts a guide post to o u r own well-beinR.
! But he saw his name typed out
W inkle almost expected Amy to be­ to see h< r still standing on the steps, pride while he changed his clothes, it They wouldn't have me. I guess
C h ild re n o r a d u lts who m ay be easily excited o r upset. boldly: w ‘lbert G eorge W inkle,
gin weeping. But she didn't. She her ban-1 at her throat, watching I ccling nil the wny down before they figured if I g(„ U|nr(1 , h
o r may be peevish, irrita b le , in tra e ta b le , cra n ky, hard to please
The thou8h‘ « f ««¡ng in and (ell- just sat there staring at him. her
him depart
Penelope was at her donning his working outfit. Ik- ad- have too fnuch to Rupport.’*
o r «0 interest, show th a t th e y are not well' p ro b a b ly o n ly ing M rs. W inkle about it swept over eyes bright and wide and dry. and feet. Staring afte r him mournfully.
e
n
went —
to -»»r.
war.
m in d his own neatness, the spick- M 1 ha.
w m
---------
him
.
The
prospect
of
this
was
one
il l a lesser «legree tliu n i f they were m a rke d ly ill and riiiio in R
he sat staring at her.
They re ­
H m ay seem curious that though *,nd'*P an «•«ncrcte floor, the shining , T rl w " 'k,c »"ought, were varied und
of both panic and intense interest. garded each other awesomely while
tt teniperature. There is a cause personal to the in d iv id u a l in C ertainly it would take a lot ot the
lathes nnd other power tools, the 1
M r. Winkle s plat «- of business
Penelope continued to howl.
)" Wurd regarded M r. W inkle
jn a e tie a lly every departnr«* fro m norm al Ix'havior.
located light m back of his house, ( leun benefits wilh every screw '
strong wind out of her sails.
Penelope was interrupted by the
d
rive
r
in
Ils
proper
place,
and
the
1
,
,,
H' nus‘' '" ‘,tit. He seemed
The standard o f health is not a risrid one. Sym ptom s shade
he
didn't
go
out
through
tin-
real
M rs. W inkle d u n n t re c.u t years,
shrill ringing of the telephone. M r
‘
' a little funny thai he
o fl im p e rc e p tib ly in to diseese w ith no announcement o f the had developed into a positive indi­ Winkle made a movement to go into door and across the fifty feet of yard work In hand left nnd waiting in
wns being drafted. When M r. Win-
good order from the day before.
to reach his shop
processes o f this im pere p tib le change. We mislead ourselves vidual who was prone to run hef the living room to answer it. but
kle protested that his activity was
To
the
Winkle:-
this
wasn't
strange
Today he didn't see any ot this.
w ith the suggestion th a t by the m o rro w we w ill feel better, o r husband the way a locomotive en­ Mrs Winkle, with a rather wild look
that he
For one thing he was loo shaken by sdroewh.it
mloht r r i i prem
n ature,
" , " r* 1 und
und »Dl.t
he
at all. There was quite a good rea
gineer kept his hand on the throt­
Unit in a few days at most a la rm in g sym ptom s w ill have de-' tle. M r. W inkle never liked to put on her face, started before be did. son for it,
—m
J y’s
a aBiuunuiOK
o
en e v io r and I the
I I - I S M S r - rs-
,
-
-
-»
A
m
astounding
behavior
Onward
.
.
.
i
A rm ’r-
She appeared to want to do some
p a rte d ; we (Io not reeoguize that perhaps o u r whole body is this into the actual term of hen-
It originated from M r. Winkle's * “ *
d raft notice had offee cd d e rln e ' him f " T 1 J*"d be<" ” ° r '
thing definite.
career as a public acco,inlaid hav h*
1'
* T
" " " ' »
to * ' “ " d at different
being aiib je ctcd to un ordeal that it is lig h tin g an in te rn a l pecking, but nevertheless that was
her.
i
Sitting in tbe breakfast nook, M r
I'o r another thing, his Im ag im tio n ed"«"l| ”a " " l l,'e
**e proceed
ing disar p ired during the depres
the true state of afTairs.
b o ttle ol w hich the perceptions arc ig n o ra n t.
Winkle heard her voice.
«ot to w ork instead of Ids hands
A n .r „ .
**" ? '
Pic-
sion. Secretly, lie was Just as glad
Now he wondered how Amy would
Iliu s disease creeps in to the body in an insidious manner.
"Why, yes . . . I suppose so," she
for he had never eared much fui bullet sped Into his flesh, tearing lures meanwhile asking questions In
take
it.
There
was
little
she
could
faltered.
"Just
a
m
inute."
Jolt to w hat extent can we protect ourselves n r in w hat wav
an indifTertnt, ofThmid manner
♦
dealing In long rows of someone through his body, leaving a gaping
do about it. Sh« wouldn't be able
Any hesitancy didn't sound like
s o id le " " d° >UU ,Ce* MbüU‘ be,n« '
have w e p e rm itte d n u rs e lv is to be weakened? This, in m 'v
rise's
figures
J
le
greatly
pi-cft-ireo
to argue with this, nor impose her Amy at all. Rather, it sounded like
bloody wound in wluth gangrene de
estim ation, is the real problem in th w a rtin g disease.— From w ill in any way upon It. He fell the Amy of y e a r, ago, when Mr. ■ tinkering with mechanical things
I
for v/hlch he had a decided (laii and I
a little sorry for her, for he knew Winkle married her.
H e re ’s H ealth.
D r. H .
Hagen.
I f otil Inu«*(l 011 page 3)
' a delieu'® to"ch
M
f
W /N K ÍE
GOES TO
m
THEODORE
PRATT
NATIONAL € DITORI A L _
SSOCIATION
NO DELINQUENCY THERE
L /O rC )l(l
CHECK ILL HEALTH AND YOU
CHECK DISEASE
A.
J
BookkeeDing Outfits, all kinds. ThTbentinel"
I